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DEWG Meeting
Summary of Seventh meeting,
Lille 23, 24 October, 2011
Seventh Meeting: objectives
• To review the global and regional progress on PPM;
• To share processes and outcomes of PPM scale up by national TB programmes in Asia and Africa;
• To discuss the potential of PPM in the introducing new diagnostics and new drugs for TB;
• To identify key components and activities of a biennial global action plan on engaging all care providers through PPM approaches.
Contribution to case notifications 2010
Average contribution
26%
Global TB Control: Challenges
• Case notifications stagnating
• Incidence decline too slow, stagnant in SE Asia
- Detect and cure all TB cases, not just 70/85
- Progress from "care" to "cutting transmission"
PPM in Africa: Kibuga
• Diverse but uptake universally accepted in the Region
• Different models
– Fully private
– Semi-subsidized
– Fully Government subsidized
– Mixed
• Difficult to give figures of PPM contribution due to integrated nature of activities (Reports on substantial contribution from Nigeria, Ghana, Tanzania, Kenya among others)
World Health Organization, Western Pacific Regional Office
PPM WPR: Hospital Engagement
China Model: Nishikiori • Infectious disease law (2004)
– Internet-based mandatory notification, referral, follow-up of non-arrivals
– Contribution to case detection +39.8% in 2010 (367,607 / 923,308)
Xizang (13)
Inner Mongolia (2)
Qinghai (3)
Gansu (2)
Heilongjiang (5)
Sichuan (24)
Yunnan (3)
Jilin (1)
Hubei (8)
Guangxi (3)
Shaanxi (9)
Hunan (12)
Anhui (6)
Shanxi (10)
Guizhou (1)
Jiangxi (22)
Fujian (8)
Shandong (23)
Guangdong] (2)
Jiangsu (36)
Zhejiang (46)Chongqing (3)
Ningxia (2)
Beijing (3)
Number of designated hospitals,
by province, China, 2010
• Task shift: TB dispensary
(public health)
↓
designated hospitals
(comprehensive TB
services in clinical
facilities)
Partner Site Increment in case
notifications
NGOs Bangladesh ~30-35%
Private Hospitals,
Private practitioners
Hyderabad, India 23%
Lalithpur, Nepal 21%
Delhi, India 29%
N. Sumatra, Yogyakarta and
Palembang, Indonesia
24%
Taunggyi, Myanmar 10%
Medical Schools India 10-20%
Industry, workplaces EPZs, Bangladesh Increments in case
finding among young
women up to 20%
Tea Estates, India ~24%
PPM SEAR: Impact on case finding : Hyder
6.Community System Strengthening
-Function as advocator raise fund and commitment,
- Increase public awareness, function as public watch to ensure deliveries of quality services,
-increasing awareness of right and responsibility of the patients (patient's charter).
-Social Mobilization, suspect identification, increasing demand creation, intensifying the services of TB in
slum areas and prison
-Leading: NGO, FBO, CSO -TA: FHI, other partners
4.Qualified TB Diagnostic
-Approach: Strengthening lab network and Quality Assurance
(public and private) DST, Culture and Microscopic
-Leading: Directorate of Medical Support
- TA: KNCV and JATA
2.Public/Private Hospital Services
- Approach: Hospital
Accreditation, Implementation TB DOTS as Minimum Standard
requirement for accreditation of Hospitals
- Leading: Directorates of Referral Health Services
-TA: KNCV
3.Quality DOTS services by Private Practitioners and
Specialist
- Approach: Implementation of ISTC for
all TB care and treatment from all care providers, increasing professional responsibility to cure TB patients,
rewarding through cumulative credits mechanism for licensing/certification
Leading: IMA -TA: ATS,
5.Quality of anti TB Drug Dispensing and rational
Use of Drug
-Approach: law enforcement, establishment of networking and
monitoring system, WHO prequalification
-Leading: Pharmacist Association, DG of
Pharmaceutical Services, FDA -TA: USP and MSH
1.Basic DOTS Services At Puskesmas
-Approach: Surveillance System Strengthening and MIFA, Improving
quality of care, increasing coverage of TBHIV, reaching un-reach pop at
remote are (DTPK), increasing referral to Quality DOTS Services
-Leading: NTP -TA: WHO, FHI and other
partners
The Indonesia PPM Model
PPM Myanmar
NTP, 80.8%
Hospital, 3.0%
MSF-H, 2.1%
PSI, 12.1%MMA, 1.6%
MDM, 0.2%AHRN (Shan North), 0.2%
Proportion all forms of TB patients contributed by NTP and other reporting units (2010)
2,029
2,430
3,259 5,190
5,951
5,328
5,281
70,000
75,000
80,000
85,000
90,000
2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010
PPM: Philippines
Private
Public +
private
PPM Nigeria
• Total TB cases registered (All forms) - 90447
• New smear positive cases – 45416
• PPM care providers (including non-NTP public providers such as Teaching hospitals) contributed. 35% (31 656 cases) of the cases notified in 2011
Engaging pharmacists in TB Control
Engaging pharmacists in TB Control
Private sector overuse of inappropriate diagnostic assays
9% 9% 3%
8%
71%
Proportion of testing Total ~4000/mo.
Microscopy
Culture
IGRA
Molecular
Serology
Assay Price (USD)
Microscopy 4.5 - 7
Culture 16
IGRA 55
Molecular 45-90
Serology 12 Source: private communication, India
Uptake of Xpert
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
0
20,000
40,000
60,000
80,000
100,000
120,000
140,000
160,000
2010 Q22010 Q32010 Q42011 Q12011 Q22011 Q3
# Tests # Countries
17 • Assessment of Private Sector TB Landscape in HBCs: Final Presentation • March 2010
1st line private markets are variable and, in some countries, LARGE [Measured relative to each country’s TB burden]
1st Line Overall Value Strength Price
Drug Form
Manufac-turer
117% 116%
86%
65%
23% 17%
13% 7% 7%
3%
0%
20%
40%
60%
80%
100%
120%
140%
% in
cid
en
t cases c
overed
by p
riv
ate
secto
r T
B
dru
gs
• These 10 countries = 60% of global burden.
• Average 67% public sector case detection.
• Average 66% of incidence potentially covered by private sector drugs.
18
How can the health sector prepare for the introduction of new TB drugs?
• How to mitigate this threat to new TB drugs? First category of response is to improve the current delivery landscape
– Expansion of public-private mix (PPM) programs
– Expand the reach of public TB programs
– Improve regulatory oversight for marketing approvals
– Expand public sector diagnosis and treatment of MDR-TB
– Improve the quality of care in the private sector, e.g., less fragmentation (franchises etc), better financing (insurance, vouchers, contracting), and integrate high quality TB treatment into these mechanisms.
Woven throughout –
All TB Components Need the Private Sector
GFATM: PPM Budgets and expenditures
• Only 3.6% of the TB funding of the Global Fund allocated to PPM in 2010
• Spending of Global Fund grants with PPM component on PPM was 4.2% of total TB expenditure
• Top two regions with highest share of their budget allocated to PPM: East Asia and the Pacific and West & Central Africa (7.3% and 4.9% respectively)
• Largest PPM investments were in China, Indonesia and Ghana: US$ 25.5 million, US$ 7.8 million and US$ 4.9 million, respectively
Source: 2010 EFR
Increasing the effectiveness of
the Stop TB Partnership in
engaging all care providers
PPM Subgroup Meeting: Lille
A “White Paper” of the PPM Subgroup
Objectives • To contribute to the goal of universal access to high
quality diagnostic, treatment, and prevention services
through appropriate engagement of care providers,
healthcare facilities and laboratories:
• To strengthen health systems through promotion of
effective engagement of all providers:
• To promote best practices for implementation and scale-
up for engagement of all providers by providing guidance
and tools for global, regional, country-specific policies,
strategies and plans:
• To ensure that the current and/or potential role of non-
program providers is taken into account in the activities
of all components of the Stop TB partnership:
Next Steps • Seek full working group status as the
“Working Group to Engage all Providers” with representation on the Partnership Coordinating Board.
• Revise the Core Group terms of reference as follows:
– oversight and coordination of the activities of the working group
– coordination of the activities of the working group with those of other
Partnership working groups
– oversee the preparation of a strategic plan and annual work plans to
implement the strategic plan
– coordinate any revisions of the Global Plan to Stop TB as they relate
to the engagement of private sector providers
– serve as the liaison between the Partnership and the Stop TB
Department„s activities in engaging all providers